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Irish scientists uncover genetic secrets of human adaptation to high altitude
A group of top international scientists including geneticists from the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) has made a breakthrough in understanding human adaptation to high altitude environments.
The new study identifies a gene in Tibetan highlanders, who live high in the
Himalayas, which allows them to thrive at altitudes more than two miles above
sea level which induce serious altitude sickness in other populations. The
findings are published in the prestigious science journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) this week.
The study also has implications to a wider understanding of human health and fitness. Low oxygen levels (hypoxia) is a common problem in patients both at home and in hospital. The new research is a step towards understanding how an indigenous population deals with hypoxia. By identifying genes that have helped Tibetans adapt to hypoxia we can potentially develop new approaches to dealing with low oxygen in for example, intensive care patients.
People who live or travel at high altitude respond to the lack of oxygen by
making more haemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying component of human blood.
Athletes often train at high altitude to increase haemoglobin concentration in
order to process more oxygen when competing. However, high levels of
haemoglobin at high altitude can cause altitude sickness. Tibetans have
evolved physiologically to avoid altitude sickness by maintaining low
haemoglobin concentrations.
To pinpoint the genetic variants underlying Tibetans’ relatively low haemoglobin levels, the researchers collected blood samples from nearly 200 Tibetan villagers living in three regions high in the Himalayas.
A senior author of the study, Dr. Gianpiero Cavalleri, Biomedical Research
Lecturer, RCSI, explains: “when we compared the DNA of the Tibetans to lowland
Chinese we saw a genetic signature that was carried by almost all of the
Tibetans but by very few of the Chinese. This same type is linked with low
haemoglobin.”
The team’s findings will be published the week of June 7th in the early online
edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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Royal College of Surgeons Ireland . 123 St Stephens Green . Dublin 2 . Ireland . Tel: 353 1 402 2100 . Email: info@rcsi.ie